Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 8 Oct 1885, p. 6

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 â- â-  â-  I ii 1 e* ff^. An AwfulAdventure. In the Teetb of a Tornado -A Tlirilliiig Experience. We were riding toward the northeMt, taAving been to a ranch lying toward the Vega Pmb, though a number of miles this side of It. That feeling which the birds had awak- ened had p-oved very tranrient. My sister suddenly luiked in a tone of interest, unting- ed by fear, if we had noticed the cloud in wie soutbwt^st, and was it customary for Colorado skies to exhibit such freaks? Upon that we all turned us about, and as Nan, with a qnjck cry, pulled up her horse, we also stopped our ponies and gazed. Speak- ing for my«elf, I only felt'then a keen inter- est, without alarm, at the sight before me. Until I looked at my couisn's face I did not think of fear. A great way cff it appeared to me, I was told afterward it must have I been about ten miles distant when we first saw it, was ^clond absolutely black. For the first time I knew what the phrase " inky blacknetis" meant. Neither before nor since have I ever seen a cloud of that colour. It was roughly cone-shaped, the point toward the eaitb. But even its shape and colour were not the most terrible things about it. The mass was " boiling." No other word applies to the incessant rapid changes in its texture, which all the time preserved its blackne»8,,and through it there were constant flashes of li^thtning. Bat we heard no thun- der then. I shall never torget the whiteness that came to Nan's face. Without know- ing that I saw them, I yet rememberiad af- terward that her fingers clutched painfully «bout the bridle and that she reeled slight- ly in her saddle. "Let me think," she said in a low voice. I did not speak, but my sister, who did not see Nan's face, said in a common- place voice " Is not that rather a belligerent speci- men of a cloud " Nan did not apparently hear her she sat silent for perbaps half-a-minute, tben she turned to us and said quickly " I hope you can rid« fast. We can't get home what good if we could There is a narrow gulch about a mile and a half from herp. It's the only place I know." She turned her horse sharply to the right and told him fiercely to go. We followed, ridicgas I badnever ridden before. The horses caught fire from us and raced on in that wild way they have, which is not like the man- lier of horaeB in the Ea^t. In spite of the fear which now posaessed us all, there was a certain glorious feeling in that ride. Af cer we had turned we could look cff a;t our right at the cloud, which was rushing on with terrible quickness, and which I now fancied was pursuing us, and us alone. Suddenly there was a thuaderouS sound toward tha west, and looking that way I saw a vast herd of cattle sweeping on, a dark surging m).88, with tossing horns glancing white in the sunshine, for the sun was thin- ing brilliantly at tr.is time. It.was a stam- pede. I never knev wh.ther they were frightened by the cloud or had been urged on by the unexplained impulse that some times cornea to-them to flee madly over the plaiup. At another time this sight would have been of stirring interest now I did not care to watch the flight of the cattle. I was too iatent on our own race against the cloud. The lightning was playing through the black vapor incessantly. More clouds, having the appearance of common " thun- der heads," rose and dispersed themaelves over tbe sky, and at last obscured the sun- light. It was a relief to me when the sun ceased to shine, for the scene seemed leas abnormally terrific. Within a few rods of the opening of the gulch I heard a roar, as of oncoming wind. Nan cried out again to her horse, the ani- mals lurched forward yet faster, and in a moment we were all entering the ravine. It was extremely uneven ground, and cover- ed by broken sharp stones. My sister and I were waiching !Nau she slipped off the saddle and hurriedly motioned to us to do the same. The instant we were dismounted the horses scrambled rapidly forward fur- ther into the gulch, and we did the same. Nan now in the rear, and driving us along That night I found my shoes cut, and a gash in my fo t, bat I did not feel the wound when I received It. While we were thus hurrying to get to the deepest shelter of the gully, the roar above us was awful, and was increasing every moment. It reverberated straogely through the ravine. We could not have heard a word had we spoken. We all ecopped simultaneously and looked at each other. They were two very white faces that I saw, with strained frightened eyes. Xan made a movement with her head that we were not to go on and we crouched down against the rocky sides of the earth. The next instant Emma leaned heavily upon me, and silen Jy pointed up- ward toward the chasm's opening, were we had entered. The black cloud was just going pa^t our point of vision it had dilat- ed to twice its former size, butslill retained its cylinder shape. If it could be possible it was more dense then ever, and boiling in its blackness. Bills of fire sped back and forth in the air or ny sight was under a hallucination to that effect. All the phe- nomena seemed to have their center in that cone of black cloud. The strangest, the most awful thing of all that fearful experi- ence W8S what I saw now. Behind that black cloud, whether folio wii^g it or driving it I know not, came a tall cloud of int'usest, most dazzling white â€" a pillar of glory, grow- ing every instant more like a pillar of fire, aadjsoon appearing to control the iaky shape. The roariag noise was now at its height. In a moment the two mysterious shapes had passed from our contracted line of vis- ion they marched on. destroying as they went. The crash of timber along a stream not far off. the cannon swiing of the thunder, which had now opened its forces, and above all the overwhelming roar of the wind, made us shriok and cower closer together. A fiercer blast caused us to throw ourselves S*t on the stony ground grasping at each other's hands. So ignorant was I that I be- lieved at the time that we were in the full power of the tomade, instead of being shel- tered by the walls ot the galch. Afterward I knew that we could hardly have saved our lives had we not been able to reach this ravine. call thinga in a dream, so I recall the ind- deati of the time while we remained in that rsfogpe. Once, in a glare of the light- ning, and while my eyea were open and my head raised, I saw several obj acts flying over the top of the gnlch. They were sheep, and tiieir dead, bruised liodiea were found, as if they had teen flung liard against the ground, after the storm. Once aomethinit came down cloae by me, liitting my liand where I had dug my lingera unconsciously down into the earth. It was a small prairie dog, and it lay still in death, near me. Many prairie hena the next day were found dead, with almost all their feathers stripped off by the wind. While the terror lasted there waa hardly a loU in thef erocity of it. I thought we had been hours hiding there when at last the rain began to oome down heavily, and a moment id^ter the wind sen- sibly aiminished to a hard gale. We were directly soaked thoroughly, bu- I think none of us cared for that. The hurling noise of the storm was still deafening, but we felt that the worst was over, for us at least. That demon cone of cloud was flying further on its road of destruction, but it had left us. ^DA GBEES'S QITEES HIST0B7. t'omlBK All tbe Way from Cuba to Go to Jail InjCompaoy wltb her Husband Ada Green, the young Cuban wife who traced her husband to Virginia some weeks ago, was brought before the court for burg- lary. Her stoiy, as given in her testimony, is romantic. "I was bom in the West Indies eighteen years ago," she said, "and my occupation is that of a dressmaker. I lett Cuba several years ago and went to Philadelphia. While in that city I became acquainted with Wil- liam Hicks and marrli d liin. He deserted me, and I returned to my home m Cuba. Some time elapsed before! could obtain any tidings of hia whereabouts, but finally X learned that he waa in this country and in trouble. I immediately left Cuba and land- ed in New York. From New Yoik I went to Philadelphia and Boston and diligently searced forhim. At last I heard that he was in Richmond and in prison. I came on to Rtchmond, passing through Washington, where I put on male attire. When I found that my husband was tn jail I set to work to know how I could get to nim. I concluded to commit theft that I might be sent to jail, where I could be with him." The wife told her story calmly, and excit- ed much sympathy in its recital. She had no idea of the enormity of the crime she com- mitted. After she got in jail she constantly talked with her husband, and waa with him several times in his cell. She talked so loud- ly that she was overheard by some of her fel- low prisoners, and they conamnnicated their suspicions to the cflicera. The evidence was dead against her, and she ple^tded gailty. Many bystanders were touched at the scene. The cfiScers of the court will sign a petition requesting the Governor to commute her sentence to twelve moaths in jail. Even with this commutation her husband will be out of jail some months before her. During part of her varied experience she served as cabin boy on a ship. The Phantom Headlight. Hank .Van Buskirk is one of the bravest and belt engineers that ever set foot in a looomotive'a cab He is noted for ner' e, and the daring speed to which he sometimes urges his tiery steed has made him a sort of a hero among the boys of the C. A. road, over which he has pulled traina for many years and has been phenomenally successful in avoiding serioua accidents. Hank has a world of warm friends, but they are mostly railroad chums, and we all know how they delight in joking each other when they get the age or rubber upon some luckless brother employe. When Hank first began service for the C. A. he had no silver in his locks and no gold in his handsome pear y ivories. But for a peculiar circumstance that happened t arly in his career he might still be young and happy. He was pulling the " Denver Express" from Roodhouse to Bloomington at that time, they say, with Conductor Lat- ham on deck. Suddenly the shrill-voiced whistle called a halt and the train slackened its speed as the air brakes pinched the grind- ing wheels. In a moment the long line of passer gar coaches came to a stand-still. For- tunately the train wa^i only a few rods from a switch, and it was but the work of a min- ute to side-track, to allow the approaching engine to pass. The passengers hurriedly dressed and secreted tht ir valuables, think- ing that the James brothers were about to make them am early and informal call. The train men all got down with their lanterns to see what the trouble might be. They sat down on the track to await the airivalof the strange engine and conjecture as to its pos- sible mission. Some said it waa an extra wild train, but no one could underatand why it should encroach upon their time, as they were not late and had not been informed of any such extra. After they had smoked and guessed about the approaching intruder and swapped lies for about a half hour it began to dawn upon the boys all waa not right. The headlight of the approaching engine liad veered to the right a degree or ao and waa considerably higher than it was when first seen. The truth seemed to atrike them all at once â€" it was the silvery moon â€" and not a headlight. Bat there it stood right in their way. Hank hung his head and stole quietly into his cab. The whistle sounded dolefully as Hank gave it a feeble pull. When the switch was cleared the throttle was pulled wide open, and no engine ever flew oyer the rattling raib as this one did. The tr;an was less upon the track than in the air. It waa the best time ever made on that road until the screeching and rumbling and hissing monster shot into Jackaonville like a cata- pult. For a long time the boys called Hank "Sil- very Moon," " Flying Dutchman," and other similar paeudonyma. Smithâ€" "Doea Mr. Jlmaon live here?" Darkeyâ€" "No. sab he did lib heah, but he moved away de odder night " "Left in bad odor, did he ' "Yea, sah he had de wust href yo' ebber smelt, aah." A paner announcea that "men make biff and audden juiipa in the United States^' Yea, and if they happen to have about th^ clothes a few hundred thonaand dollars be- longing to Bome one elae, their jump naually bringa them down on the Canadian aide i the boundary. BTRAIOE BUT TBUB. Stanley, the explorer, aaya that ««»«^?J[^ occadona he bought hia life of wUd tnbea for a pound of two-ahiUing powder. A woman in Allentown, Pa., goea to aleep every evening at 9 o'clock, and i"leepa aound- ly until 5 o'clock the next afternoon, and has been keeping np this practice nnintor- raptedlyfor eighteen months past. Her health ia of the beat.^ The Califomia papera report that a new species of bear has been diacovered on Mfc Shaata which ia found in no other part of the world. It ia about the size of a shep- herd dog, ia white and very ferooioua. Three have been killed lately. The terrora of the cyclone have material- ly leaaened;to a certain Dakota farmer amce he arranged a trap door and a system of pul- leys so that when he hears a storm comiu in the night he can pull a cord and hia bed will sink int • the cellar. According to the observation of an Hava- na doctor, reported in the annals of the Royal Academy of Science inthatci»y, mos- quitoes may b*' agents for the transfer of the germs of yellow feve and of the paraaitea which produce elephantiasis. Some charcokl burners at the foot of a Nevada mountain had a narrow escape from death in a terrific snowslide recently. As the mass descended into the heated atmos- phere of the valley it melted almost instan- taneously and changed from an avalanche into a roaring tcrrent, through which the men escaped by wading and awimming. The healing power of earthquakes is a subject of discussion in the Spanish medical press. The statement is made that in the recent shake up at Malaga most of the pa- tients forgot their diseases and took to the open air. The change agreed with them so well that a few only returned to the hos- pital. The surest test for watrred mSk is said to consist in dipping a well polished knitting needle into a deep vessel of milk, and then immediately withdrawing it in an upright position. U the milk ia pure a drop of the milk will hang to the needle, butthe addition of even a small portion of water will pre- vent the adherence of the drop. Among tna new applicationa of cotton is its uae, in part, in the construction cf houses the material employed for the purpose be- ing the refuse, which, when ground up with an equal amount of straw and asbestos, is converted into a paste, and this is formed into large slabs or bricks, which acquire, it is said, the hardness of stone, and furnish a really valuable buUdlng material. Under certain conditions some common articles of household decoration may be sources of danger. An insurance company is reported to have refused risks in houses in which perfectly spherical fish gloles or water bottles are kept. Thecompany claims that through the coldest portion of the Win- ,ter three fires were started in parlors where articles wi-.re in such a position as to receive the direct rays of the sun through plate glass windows. It is said there is no danger if the vessel ia oval or slightly flattened. A writer in the Price Current says a fire was started on his library table by the sun shin- ing upon his paper waightmade of four glass globes fastened together so that three rest upon the table and one rests above the others. The Largest Land Animal in the World. Since the death of Jumbo various atate- menta have been pnbliahed aato the exact atature of that giant elephant. The figures range from eUven feet to eleven feet and a half, but whether the height given is thit at the shoulder doea not appear. If Jumbo was eleven feet six inches high at the shoulder there is reason to believe that be waa the largest land animal in the world. The size of elephants is commonly over- estimated. Their stature is almost always exagg rated in those countries where they are tound wild. Even European travellers of scientific training have made notable mis- takes in this respect. African elephants which Mt\j or Denham, one of the early ex- plorers, supposed to be sixteen feet high proved to be less than ten feet when killed. In Ceylon the native elephant, which waa formerly thought to be larger than the Afri- can animal, ia rarely taller than nine feet and Sir Emerson Tennent in his celebrated work on the natural history of that island says that in the district where the hunters agree that the largest specimens are to be found, " the tallest of ordinary herds do no't average more than eight feet." Ia India the same tendency to exaggera- tion prevails. Dr. Falconer was authority for the statement by Prof. Ansted, more than a quarter of a century ago, that " out of eleven hundred elephants from which the tallest were selected and measured with care, on one occasion in India, there was not one whose height equalled eleven feet." At the S resent day probably no one is better quail- ed to spcMk with reference to the size of Indian elephants than Mr. G. P. Sanderaon, the oflcer in charge of the elpefaant catch- ing eatablishment maintained by the British Government at Mysore. He does not be- lieve tiiat, there is an elephant in India ten feet high at the shoulder. He haa measured a great many, and the talleat waa nine feet and ten inches. " The next largest are two tuskers belonging to hia Highness tie Maharajah of My acre, each nine feet eight inches, captured in Mysore some forty yeara ago and still alive." Mr. Sanderson, in hia very entertaining work on the wild beaata of India, says that twice round an ele- phant's foot is his height, within one or two mches. Generally this measurement wfll give the exact stature, but when peraona unfamiliar with elephants are aaked to guess how many timea the circumference of the foot muat be multiplied to aaoertain how tall the animal is, they say from ten to fifteen times. Not only may we reaaonably conclude that Jumbo waa the largeat land animal in the world, or, at all eventa, without any superior in aize, bat it iaaafeto aay that a much larger walking beaat could not be made out of flesh and bones. Thia ia me- chanically demonatrable. In order to aup- port a heavier oreatore, tha aim of the lesa, even with practically aolid bonea, would have to be ao increased aato render pro- greaaion impoaible. Theae eonalderationa indioate that we ahall never aee a larger land animal than Jambo. ventlUttryCIiweliea, B«b«ol^ PnbUc M»«W,j»w^ a Seven »izeB »" JJ^rtbertal"**^-. heaUDKappanitiis. i^* Absolatrly «as Tlaht Brick or Portable Fonn. Oontespondsnoe soUcited THE E. C. (UXITED.) A aif nnrPR To intr-^oe then, we Btlf-Ooff»»lB«Wailiiii«lI»e»'be* Uroo^nt oaaaaadnsioarB SM. P.O.andexptssiiffiw .»~.-c. Tintw*Tiny»Lro.«"r-P»..v.Y " " wiiiiiiJiuiiiiiiu AUGURS BUY THE STA WlUbeeeS toXInoh hols: hand or h ots e powsi It fast Dsr hooi. Our eombinad snsar and Book Dtlll â-  BMianMeeaa, wwkad br staaai or hori»«ow«r. Bsad tor Ostalogas. JAMBS PARK SON, Fork Packers, Toronto. L. O. Baoon, Rolled Sides Bsoon, 0. 0. Baoon, Olsseow Beef Hams, Sugar Cured Ham, Dried Beef, Br ast Baoon. Smoked Tongues, Hess Pork PloUad ongaes. Cheese, Family or Navy Pork lAid io Tabs and Pails. The Best Brands of Bug- Usb Fins Dairy Salt in Stock CLUB FEETT" CROWITBD OKLT BT FAailAIi SUCCBSS. Heretofore a new ingtrument I invent- ei five years ago, passed throngtat a geii:8 ot imprjvem^Dts, acd I now rlaim poaitirely that every club toot may be straightened by tiiis mott v.iuahle method For ptrtlculara send six ceut stamp for 0ook oa Rupture ai.d Hum tne Frame. Ad'^reas. CUAS. OLUttiE, 111 King Street West, Toronto, Ont. CANADA PERMANENT LOAN SAVINGS CO. Ineerporated, A. D. 1885. Subscribed apital $3,000,000 Paid up Capitol .2.200,000 Beaerve Fund 1,100.000 Total Assets. â-  8.600,000 o m o B Company's BulldinKS, Toronto St, Toronto. The Company has now on hand a large amount of English money which it ia pre- pared to lend on firatclaas aeouritiea at low ratea of intereat. Apply to J. BEVBEKT MA80W, Managing Director Clapperton's Spool iwj ^^^^^ tiL^^f'LP?^"" oonce?tr2Sr^rpS? ties, Apeifeot meuianf «lll* ^iwnfeSL^ very pretty, uniqiirTirH '****'*OiW^I Crewl Soap, the n^lvtl^^^^^^i \bB Bftgle bu .. \V'iwher is th« o^. Warthinar Machmf ir Teiited that AWf-tb. woman o r g I .â-  .- years old, withoii tiie use of a wait, board, can with en wash 60 to 100 pie*-' in on n boor. Ag'::. wanted all OTer C i, Ada. Sample saiit t trial andterritory siTpn. Ladfps makri^dfRCcta;!!© wearr «lethea, and every lArtv ^ill buy after trvjn;? it; WKei..::t' to wash calicos in five naiTiir.'i- coti .u jro* lu in SO, bedcloth- 10, ornosaie. Adffrrs«i. FKiuts *r t(v, rarentee«aadUan iilan Line Jiojal m it ^sn"d1^,t"HSi{^^S'"^^ tresl. weekly; oS^^^S^^^i^S, "*rhiuaSiphirto^S?^'"»*rjS Fbr freight, passaSs m mi. apply to A.*8o£ShMfe cS*LS Onnard ft Co. HaSSr- ni!i"..B»Wj Allan ft; Co., Chioajtoi r*^ i*»l i^UTTHirocil TheNewOo-Operatl?! â€"â€"ABE THE BEST IN TIE «â- " WAM»! HEW nunQii Latest Improved Attaclm â€" a Agents price for similar nacliii Our price only 125 eaclL More bayiog aend vu itunc (or ou eloid i ^â- Sil.li snd lample of lewisg. ^^ •*â-  BI»ehlnei gnuuiteed (or time mil iili Aiif Isdv wintlEg 1 mtohine will lo nil ki THE OO-OPIRiTm Sewing Maehinel « .TAMRS PT. 8f UTR. BAlOLlt PEERLESS OIU .A.li.ea.d. of -A.11 Competitors. HIGHEST HONORS AND GOLD MEDAL AT TOROB Six Gold Medals in Three Years-Best Record in the WorM. I ^SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.^ Ask for PEERLESS, and be sure ;6u get it, as there are imitations. The gennlne ii oiil;iiii'il!| SiMUEL BOEBS CO. {Q"^^°.o^Kg7 °^ $10 Reward for the Convictioul Of pelTB Who of-]y[gQQLL»gfe^^, fer and Sell In- EH M LARDINE MsfoliiS It ii the only P"P»"tLflr'5Sth'*| contains all the nutrlfouB. ^f'^l^^ »\ latine properties of bee' »nd the^n^^^ hag the power to wpply noDiishmeni »» bone, aud musole, Examine Their Superior Ment NEW HARRIS HOT AlK FlBWi C^OUac'H Bjing Clill ,^B*ebsd ons, ts outside rw»to*»* " " woBdroi [J51 'dark and stoimy,â€" the wind wi ri^^Zi^ ast bsstls tbe deathbed i.- „| oMstoreâ€" " onoe brlgrl JsW^ioBl/ «*aI-*hey oaUed him ' to see *e briny tears test flowing do l^rid op • P»y" " Uiought 1 81 •^diflSen one she lived fardesrc '"JJiaU smother's heart that wretohi ^dfmlifted. see. she kneels beJde ti IttatOod wiU spare her boy and tal i^gjj'^iirer from the childâ€" soft fe' 'l fteamtelado so smUe, and beckon ir -ppitin, dear mother, now; but, oh I â- Â£â€¢*• I***' '°' ^^ ""^^ '"" Mrdonot ory I w â- .• » aSe, trembling haste, she held a tea i '~lo thack herâ€" then he took three R^,^ when heoomes from work' I said ' h^ to biu • Mother, nowru goto sleep." Alas, l^he was dying I the ohUd she lov rd the last words she'd ever wiihed to door is openedâ€" the Collier'e e «r'aad the mother meet, but neither i "thai all was over., he knew the child the cindle in his hand, and stood besid ^rering Up gave token ot the grief he'd ec"al I the mother Joins him I the stricken o Ihlrts bowed down by sorrow they humbl I Him kvcn, once more that they iniy meet theii "UtUeJmil" tEEBIBLE_TRAED Itfte Author of "The Flower Gi ILovKLY Lady Lynucrst," c., CHAPTER Vn. be little village of Midhnrst was thn the wildest stte of excitement siion when the tragical fate of Cap ithwaite beca-ne known, ii nsaal in such circumstances, t itrange rumours g-iined currency, idow Lane drove a roaring trade, r ing the honours with the landlord Sray Parrot, duricg the few days p be one fixed for the Coroner's ic(juf wild and improbable as those coc j I were, they ail fell short of the truth [It's only just what might have beuu ed " Meg Smith declared, .with a scf as of her untidy head. " I al'o ys f od'd come of her galiivantin' about etters and now my words 'ave c( II JAy, poor lass but it was hard for ft mw made a fnle of her. I've he lu how the Capt in could be awful â- tin' when he chose, and it's not surpri n if he turned the gal's head " one go jeei dame declared. I Pooh ' rejomed Meg, who appearec In one of her most vindicti^^e moc W d been warned often enough, but |too grand for poor folks like us, and |r«»-hankering after 'igh folks. Id -With a harsh langh-"it did m lieel a bit m*d when she found the Ca â- neant nothin' f ,r all his soft words to think that she, who was Buci t-up piTOs of goods, should actus skilled the Capfin I declare it m* pel qwte creepy when I think of It P»»y. interrupted a deep voice at 1 «fi.J* ^°"' ^« ^«U, Mpg Smith. ^things you cannot prove, or yon n J«nng your self into trouble. No l»^rtght to accuse Dolly Jarvis of aay ^Ohif, yon To„ Larkins, is it V an JdL ««1***^* disdainful shrug of T.* J ,."i,co""e we all know ImSler^ • "' """ " "^^ "" " red flush rose to the young m i wlTi"*^?^"" »« »ia«»e of mai WT„« â- *"^* another in the dark 2iZS- ^-"yJwvis ought no^ J J«naed unheard and-and she in «25ff Z®* *o defend herself or to f^'y I." Jr "y" the troth!" aSMdwiSft,,^'**"' ^^' «^'i«^ *^ Ltoe"*^ â-  "ill?" questio '••iSSf.^""'" T°«» answered !y«ttZSL?.^"°* " manner. •* lbs dS^' ^^ '^^^^ i«»ckiy iM ' WooBi!r ^â„¢** " one. " '»*mS So*; "J^*8 "^^" »Pi*^" ttaowt ' " any eaveedropi ^•*"*BSt\/'"'"*^ "7 of "Sh L*. you «^^ "" 1^« grou'^d t^l Sh?!^.?"**" ** be shocke wSi Sr^ y**? " I do, that 1) L5Wau^^»P*J?o°t of jealou: •â- ^i tbs JlJ??' V^^ '^^^r this ^2iK5n.f**"'«d oflF. leaviifl '•comforteble impress on beh mut iplifting •kAia,^ *»^Pering8, and Kl**^.nr.r ^*5 ?*^e ntterance E^ »**Kmh«~"" I"t'ever, the ice o *«ks tb^ ?? accepted fact v U«g oW^TS^y haa really ki; M*»n«ii ^^ ^^* day fired for '-^iSiS^«/~""tthel â- Oh i*»cWBlf^ ii'^^^"dtrue \. itSJ'SPtfcb S-L^r^"'® circumstances '^WSrSTiS^^waite's death. T '*^V in the adjoining ro^ H vni illU^

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